Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
San Juan and Quezon City: Nicolas Domingo Relator (court reporter) of the Real Audiencia of Manila [24]: 12 in 1898. [25] Norberto S. Amoranto Sr. Street (Calle Retiro) Quezon City: Norberto S. Amoranto: The first elected and 5th Mayor of Quezon City (1954-1976). [26] Calle marqués de Novaliches San Miguel, Manila: Manuel Pavia y Lacy
Quezon City: Morong Street Scout Oscar M. Alcaraz Street Quezon City: New York Avenue (west) Pablo P. Reyes, Sr. Street (old name still in use) Quezon City: Nevada Street F. Manalo Street Quezon City: North Avenue (U.P. campus) Osmeña Avenue Quezon City: North Diversion Road North Luzon Expressway: Quezon City–Mabalacat: Pacific Avenue Doña ...
This page was last edited on 16 January 2020, at 09:43 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Open Street Map imagery; QC-TOD Presentation. League of Cities of the Philippines. Quezon City Department of Public Order and Safety / Quezon City Planning and Development Office. Retrieved on 23 January 2018. Author: Hariboneagle927
Timog Avenue (Barangay Laging Handa of Quezon City; Timog is Tagalog for "south") – N172; Times Street (Barangay West Triangle; exclusive neighborhood of Quezon City) Tomas Morato Avenue (ABS-CBN Compound in South Triangle to E. Rodriguez Sr. Avenue in Quezon City) Visayas Avenue (Quezon Memorial Circle to Tandang Sora Avenue in Quezon City)
Gilmore Avenue, formerly known as Gilmore Street, is a two-lane, one-way road in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines.It runs one-way from Eulogio Rodriguez Sr. Avenue in New Manila and terminates at Nicanor Domingo Street in Valencia.
Cubao and Loyola Heights. Aurora Boulevard is divided into two routes: the segment from G. Araneta Avenue to EDSA and EDSA to Katipunan Avenue ().Most of the road is a 4-lane dual carriageway, with LRT Line 2 having five stations above ground and one (Katipunan station) located underground.
The land on which the street lies used to be part of an estate owned by the family of José O. Vera, founder of Sampaguita Pictures and a Philippine senator. [2] In the late 1950s, Quezon City mayor Norberto S. Amoranto convinced the Vera family to permit construction of the street through their property, part of a project to improve connectivity between Quezon City — at the time the capital ...